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Oshawa Daily Times, 29 May 1931, p. 7

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wh cz "* THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, MY 79, TIS ~ ™ PAGE SEVEN Amount of Care Should Be Every Chi 's Right Love and Proper HEALTH, GOOD *" (Continued from page 8) er community, you would find that it was due to the inspiration of the teachings of the Children's Bureau. They had reached this countryside just as the products of the factory had: by word of mouth--* Somebody told us abou: it"--Dby a stray bulletin, an article in the paper, a lecturs at the community schoolhouse. Today we have in full swing in that neigh- borhood, engineered by a school nurse and county demonstration agent, all that the Government of the United States teaches about health and sanitation, just as we have cars, radios and fireless cookers. Generally speaking, this is true the nation over. The point is that this work of the Children's Bureau "gets over' by force of its need and its sound- ness. In the eighteen years since it was undertaken, the Federal Government has appropriated some thirteen million dollars for its undertakings. What it has ac- complished would be cheap at a thousand times the amount. War has cost us in sixteen of these eighteen years close to twenty- nine billion dollars. I shall not stop to argue that we should not have so spent the money--the world is what it is-- but I do assert that thirteen mil- lions in eighteen years to prevent . disease in children and two thous- and two hundred and thirty times the amount of army and navy is grotesquely disproportionate. The work of the Childrne's Bu« rean is preventive work. Examine the physical plague spots--des- troying healthy childhood--and you will find that it is conceded by those. who are trying to re- lieve or cure the victims that the numbers are slowly but surely ac- creasing, largely through the ace tivities of the Children's Bureau. Take crippled children--we get them at the rate of about four- teen thousand a year. There are many agencies, usually local, try- ing te "do something." None that I know has gone to my heart like the Shriners' Hospitals, Part of my feeling is no doubt due to the fact that my accident- al meeting with their work chang- ed what had been a pet abomina- tion into one ot a profound ad- miration. No one who over a period of yeaps has spent, as 1 have, a month or six weeks. of every winter on a 'lecture tour" but has encountered Shriners' Conventions. It was my fortune to. bé constantly colliding with them; If I"Bad not always been Lp and | igrifable on these orming Junkets, I should have enjoyed the Shriners' lusty celebrating, but hurtied and self- centered as I was, I resented the way the train and the town be- longed to them. A Shriner's red fez had come to he to me like the proverbial red flag to bull, when, some 5 years ago, I went to Shreveport, Louis- jana, for a leéctere. As usual, the Committee showed me the town. All IT remember of that gight-seeing tour now is the flood of pity and gratitude which swept over me as IT went through the beautiful and well equipped hos- pital for crippled children, which the Shriners established there in 1922--saw little limbs that had been straightened of would be goon--the bedridden and helpless that had been brought to self- help, enjoyment of life--the sor- Jowtul eyes turned glad. The isit left me weeping and laugh- Metters and catechisms. ing and set me to finding out what had started these gentle- men, Whom I had ¢ome to detest so whole-heattedly, on #06 magni- ficent an undertaking. . The Shriners say of themselvs es that they awakened about ten "yéats ago to the fact that all that their six hundred thousand or sy members were doing when they met was "to put on their cere- monials, entertain visiting nobles and enjoy themselves' --I can testity to the fact that they knew how to enjoy themselves!--and then somebody said: '"'Look here, wé fellows ought to be doing something for somebody. Why not look after crippled children? Let us charge ourselves two dcl- lars a yeAr and see what we can do" - Bix hundred thousand of then, two dollars a year, meant a mil- lion twd hundred thousand dol- lars. They built the Shreveport hospital and had money to spar:. Another year they built a second, then a third, and so on until now they have fifteen, not to speak of the various "mobile" units," as they call them, put up more or less tem- porarily in places where there is a need--one is in Honolulu. Over eleven thousand crippled children have been received by the Shriners' Hospitals in the eight years since the first was built. The Shriners take the victims of disease and accident whenever tiiere is a hope of curing or helping them, and when there is nobody clic to look after them. The Children's Bureau sets out to. decrease the number of cripples that in the .{fut- ure will knock at their doors--and they are makitig a dent. At the Society of Crippled Children of New York, anj organization now thirty years old, they tell me that they are suré the number of crippled child- ren in their territory is decreasing, though what they call contributory causes! Not only the prenatal work fostered by the Children's Burcau but the nurses' work fostered by such noble institutions as the Henry Street Settlement, the good milk campaigns; the fresh air schools for the children, the summer camps, the scores of things all pouring their little stream of prevention and cure into a source of horrible misery-- cleaning it out, dryihg it up, But there are more heartbreaking and difficult problems in dealing with child life than disease and de- formity. The crippled child is a tragedy, but the criminal child is both a tragedy and a menace to so- ciety. And in what numbers we get them! Every city in this land, as well as many a village and country- side, is turning out a batch of child- rén born and reared in homes where vice is the rule of life and where crime -of one. sort or another is an accepted occupation. The child knows only the world he is born and bred in<his ways are the ways of his world. I remember, soon after the arm- istice, being in a little devasted town of France which had been occupied for four years by the Germans-- where some dozen children, no one over nine, whose families had been trapped, had grown up in the tren- ches. They knew nothing but the ways of war, They knew all about shells, guns, dug-outs, dead lines, but nothing of baths, combs, and pocket handkerchiefs--not to say of The efforts of those who had unearthed them and were attempting to introduce them to the ways of peace had re- sulted, when I saw them, in little but bewilderement to the. children and discouragement to the teachers. And yet who can doubt that they were finally civilized ? In the long run, we admit that we are not going to wipe out crim- inal children until we wipe out all crime centres that produce them, nevertheless the experience of thousands of individuals and societ- ies attacking the problem where they meet it, and by the best means they find at hand, proves daily that these victims of evil conditions can A FAVORITE STOPPING A large number' of the babies whi THE OSHAWA HOSPITAL PLACE FOR THE STORK 0 are born in Oshawa, Whitby and district get the first glimpse of the world when they open their eyes in the maternity ward of the Oshawa Hospital. Here moth. ers and babies get the best of are able to go home to be fathers. The hospital excels tion to all maternity cases care and aftér two or three weeks welcomed by fond husbands and in giving the best possible atten. be and are being brought back to decency and order and usetul, happy living. Take the experience of my friend Sanford. Hearn, of the Goodwill Center of Brooklyn. Iighteen years ago he set himself down in what was by general consent the then wickedest district in Greater New York to see what could be done for the children. There were few indeed in his neighborhood who, were not familiar with every form of evd, drunkenness, vicious prac- tises; thicving--even murder--indeed onic of the prides of the boys who strayed into his settlement was hay- ing seen a man killed. There was onc bov who boasted of having been in at three killings! What could Sanford Hearn do? He didn't know, but he had a pro- found faith that if you could awak- en an interest in any healthy, de- cent thing--giywe a look in on a kind of life not evil--you had taken your first-step. He trapped them at the start and still continues to do so by a Saturday afternoon picture show--movies--a talk, an invitation to make yourself at home. They come to these shows by the hun- dreds, storming the gates, and al- way there are those who linger. The problem then is to find for these the point of it geresi-aiwdih as varied as the child, always a per- sonal task--which will hold them. I remember that J. Liberty Tadd, the interesting artist of Philadelphia who believed in training both hands to equal skill, used regularly to find in his night manual training calss- es for street urchins those who could not be interested in construc- tion of any sort, but who would fall with enthusiasm on any destruction, So he kept all of the multitudes of carvings and buildings of his class- es that "did not come off", and must be thrown away, for these young destroyers to express themselves on. To break and cut and maul a thing which somebody. had made filled their savage young hearts with joy. But not for long. All about them boys and girls were making things --Dbeautiful and useful things. In- evitably shame or envy finally over- tock them. They asked for work, and from their ranks came some of his best pupils. Such is Sanford Hearn's practise To put a boy or girl where he'll find himseli-=with a little help, ad- vice whiclt he must scek, no pres sure, no hectoring, only friendliness, welcome, help when needed--Ilet it soak in--let them do it. And the results? Well, I've seen with my own cyes boy after boy who once stormed that settlement gate, a ragamuftin, familiar with ev- ery vice and crime, come to man hood---clean, honest, active in buss WHEN HE MAKES HIS FIRST COMMUNION BOYS TWO-PANT BLUE SUITS In Cheviots and Botanies, from © $10.00 to $15.00 ETON COLLARS - White Windsor Ties Boys' Odd Blue Shorts 95¢ to $1.95 Boys' Odd Blue Bloomers $1.85 to $3.00 Boys' White Blouses - $1 .00 and $1.50 STON' iness, a student in law or medicine. Sanford Hewrn puts his percent- age of Salvage high--ten out of twelve of some groups, he will tell you--but he'll stoutly add, "If not made over, they're all helped." It is like the Shriners' crippled--perhaps not entirely cured, still the better for the treatment. All over the land men and wo- men are in one or another way practising this same wisdom and natietice with the youth from crime centers, and it is always intensive, personal, direct work that is deman- ded. A perverted mind is like a way or® saying that there is a job somewhere for évery one of us! Nobody will deny that, back of all efforts to bring to decency and right living the products of vice, there must go continually a mighty effort to rid city and country of the sources that produce them. There is an apathy, no lack of impassion- ed, determined efforts to do just this. We strive by laws, education, agencies of all sorts to make heaithy-minded, as well as healthy- bodied communities jn which to grow our children, We make tre- mendous mistakes. 1 believe my- stlf we made a mistake when we undertook to destroy one of the greatest of all the enemies of the child=the abuse of hard liquor--Dby making it a crime to manufacture drink of any sort for sale. Children should grow up without ever secing a saloon, a drunkard, a glass of whisky, wine or beer. It hasn't turned out so. They sce it at home now, learn to drink it there, often help make it--assist the bootlegger. Possibly we are learning that whiie natural appetites can be trained they can not be denied. But hard and distressing as the case is, there is no disposition to shrug our shoulders at it--say, "So be it." Rather there is an increased determination to make a tempor- ate country where a child shall un- derstand. the penalties of the abuse of any appetite--shall be -helped to self-control by choice. are saving children for their own sakes, but we are saving them also for the protection of the future that better future we struggle to believe in and which we know will only be betjgr if we can pass on from ve to vear fewer diseased and crippled, fewer crime-sqaked and degenerate, more alert minds, trained hands, honest hearts, more truth and beauty. That's what we are after and must. have to make that better world we {alk so much' about very nation on. earth today re aliizes, as we did in 1789, that if the thing it is after is to survive and establish itself, it must look to the children. That is where Rus- sia is looking. Her children are be- ing taught the communist philoso phy and practise with the ardor and thoroughness of a religion, Italy is staking the future of fas- cism on her children--they think fascism and nothing else. I have neyer seen the Russian child's ac ceptance of communism tested, but I have the Italian's of fascism, and a more complete and practical con- version I have never encountered. Take the campaign against bad manners--inconsideration on the railroads, in public places ~~ that Mussolini ordered in 1923. Appar- ently every young fascist considers himself' authorized to see that its regulations are enforced. Umbrel- las must not be laid on seats or tables in railroad stations, run the rules--or anywhere else, the zeal- ous young fascist concludes. Going into a restaurant Siena in, Palio time, I laid my umbrella--dry !--on the table. Imniediately a handsome lad of twelve or so addressed me. With some difficulty I gathered that by umbrella must stand on the floor "by order of the government!" They accept it, practise it, these boys and girls of Italy, and like the young Russians are prepared to die for it. It is the method we follow- ed in "89. It is what eyery nation setting out to preserve a revolution believes necesstary. But with this devotion to one's own system goes insistence on the tyranny and stup- idity of other systems. What can exceed the exaggeration and bitter- ness of Russia's teachings on cap- italism--the contempt and intoler- ance of Italy's teachings on dem- ocracy? But in neither case is it Ve lovers of tion taught from the start about all forms of monarchy, oligarchy. And the result Bf such education? It certainly does not make for world peace to rear a child to despise all systems but his own, instead of giv- ing him a fair and well informed idea of what each nation is trying to do and how it came about that it is what it is, Mutual understanding, mutual tol- erance and cooperation in their at- titude towards other people, other nations--that is what a group of the Lar se si more intolerant than what this na» bert Finstein himself, have set out to teach the children of the earth. These men and women met last July in Geneva to consider what scholars might do to help insure peace in the future, Begin with the children--that's the most important thing in the world, Einstein told them. There's your true scientist, who secs the root of things. He docs not dwell on his own discover- ies; relatively -- time -- space -- a straight line--a curve. Not at all. He sees the real source of human regeneration--the child. How you like this man, Einstein, the more you hear of him. He smokes a pipe, he sails a boat, he plays a violin, and he recognizes the child in the scheme of human betterment, It is an amazing army that has volunteered for the childrens' crus- ade: the Shriner with his red fez-- great snecialists--the W.C.T.U, and the Anti-saloon League--county au- thorities--regiments of nurses and tcachers -- playground and camp workers--devouted missionaries like Hearn--the officers in the courts-- the policeman on the beat--the top- notch scholar of the world, Albert Einstein, Each does what he sees to do-- megls the immediate demand on him confident that somehow his work will find its place in the whole; each helps contribute to that most elementary and essential need -- if the objective is reached -- the in- creasing number of happy, free, in- telligent homes. I wonder sometimes, indeed, if the greatest result of all these manifold activities 1s not going to be better parents, a greater number of men and women more keen to give to their children what they by chance found in some settlement, .camp, night school, for, looking at it in any way vou will, nothing has yet been devised to approach in its ef- fectiveness the home, for bringing the child into his own, 234 NEW BABIES ARRIVED IN ~~ OSHAWA SINCE (Continued from page 8) Infant Mullen Feb. Vasilina Horbacho ...... Feb. Ronald George Bullock.. Yeb. David Flennell Johnson .. Feb. Maxine Gloria Christie .. Feb. James Henry Boyd .... Feb. Dorothy Margaret Young Feb. Eleanor Jane Moore .... Feb. Edward Joseph Powers .. Feb. Rosaleen Sarah McKeigue Feb. Harry Albert Worsley .. Feb. Evan MacDonald Meintonh 'eb. Infant Hammond ...... Feb. Jean Isabel Shortt Feb. Kenneth Charles Whalley Feb. Dorothy Irene Rider .... Feb, Infant' MacMinn . + Feb. George Alexander Fair.. Feb. Peter John Riordan .... Feb. Patsy Marilyn McMurtry Feb. Leonard Charles Ovenden Feb. Wilfred Morris Prescott Feb. Baby Jeyes ...... sesnssss Feb. Donald Jeyes ....... sass Feb, Donald Roy Kilbank Feb. Robert William Schoenan Feb. Infant Veci , Feb, Joseph Daniel « Feb, Russell Frederick Greene Feb. William Wilson Feb. Audrey Frances Read .., Feb. Bernard Boyd Bailey .... Feb. Beatrice Annie DeMarsh Feb. Kenneth Alexander Childs Feb. Annie Kozak Feb. Robert Craig Colquhoun Feb, Barbara Lois Wright.... Feb. Dorothy Margaret Hogg Feb. Baby Willes ss Yeh, Helen Horky Feb. Bernice Jleen Mackin .. Feb, Barbara Joan Rosalie Coldrick Feb. 26th ANDERSON---TIMES-- GALLEY 2--Bahy Edition .. upB Marjorie Joan Perry .... Feb. 26th Lorne Clifford Heard ... Feb. 27th Infant McCann .. Mar, 1st Alan Stuart Gibson ...... Mar. 1st Joseph Gregory Clameng Mar, 2nd Alfred Janes % Mar. 5th Helen Ruth Hyman ... Mar, 6th Henry Allan Wilson ... Mar, 6th [.eonard Earl Conboy .. Mar, 6th Steve Panko Mar. 7th Clarke Scott Russell .... Mar, 7th Gordon Truman McDonald Mar, 7th Donald Francis Harrison Mar. 7th Kenneth William Armstrong Mar. 7th Maureen Georgina Florence Neal Mar. 8th Myrna Elizabeth Locke .. Mar. 8th Robert Beverley Small... Mar. 8th James Ronald Dodd ..... Mar. 9th Infant Tennier ......... Mar, 10th Bernice Alma Jane Scott Mar, 10th Ronald Walter Douglas Mar, 10th Zygmond Bienkowski .. Mar, 11th Infant Youds ........s Mar. 13th 11th 11th 11th 11th 12th 12th 13th 13th 13th 14th 14th 14th 15th 15¥h 15th 15th 16th 17th 17th 18th 18th 19th 19th 19th 20th 20th 21st 21st 21st 22nd 22nd 23rd 23rd 23rd 24th 24th 24th 24th 25th 25th 26th 15th 16th 16th 17th 18th 18th 19th Alice Joyce Topham ..... Mar. Infant Rafferty ........ Mar. Leo Thomas McCristall Mar. Franklin Thomas Sweet Mar, Joan, Diane Stephens ., Mar. William Howard Goulding Mar. Barbara Joan Wilson ... Mar, Donald James Starr Jackson Mar. William Donald Harper Mar. Infant Kichko Mar. Barbara Jane Plowright Mar, 23rd Helen Viola Davidson .. Mar, 23rd Douglas James Shortridge Mar. 23rd Clive Aldwinckle ...... Mar, 25th Dorothy Marie Dyer... Mar, 25th Kenneth Ross Gibbs .... Mar, 26th Barbara Ruth Lavender Mar, 27th John Frederick Connell Mar. 27th Bela Geza Katoch ..... Mar, 28th Selina Filipowicz ... , 28th Leon Anthony Closs ..... Mar. 28th Muriel Jean Howard .. Mar, 28th Joan Cuthbert .. Mar. 28th Edward Wesley Elliott Mar. 29th John Scott Thompson.. Mar. 30th Margaret Frances Holtforster Mar, 31st Annie Laura Heath .... Mar, 31st Roy William Rahme .... Apr. Ist Joh McFarlane Wallace Apr. 2nd Donald Moffat Fitzpatrick Apr. 2nd Delores Yvonne Griffenham Apr. 3rd Mary Elinor Morrison .. Apr. 4th Robert Thomas Kenning Apr. 4th Norma Jean Canfield .... Apr. 4th Barbara, Anne Dafoe ... Apr. 5th Ava Maric Gaynor ...... Apr. 5th Posie Joyce Robinson .. Apr. 6th William Stewart McTavish Apr. 7th Betty June Meredith .... Apr. 7th Roman Parashchuk .... Apr. 9th Evelyn Grace Laverty .. Apr. 9th Helen Patterson Sturrock Apr. 10th Kathleen Marie Monaghan Apr. 12th Madeline Eva Hall .... Apr. 12th Hugh Duncan McNevin Apr. 14th Rose Irene Fisher ...... Apr. 16th Lorne Albert Tregunna Apr. 17th Lois Marie Colton ..... Apr. 17th Olga Marie Hawkins .. Apr. 17th Frederick Joseph Smith Apr. 18th Pete Yurkevitch o..ev... Apr, 19th Mervyn Roy MacDonald Apr. 19th Robert Wilfred Mc Gillis Apr. 19th Mary Anne Mason ..... Apr. 19th Marilyn Ann Dobson .. Apr. 20th William Allan Blair .... Apr. 20th Tibos Victor Budai ..... Apr. 2lst William Bruce Irwin .... Apr. 22nd Christina Pietrzyk ..... Apr, 22nd Patricia Kathleen Nobbin Apr. 22nd William Herbert Smith .. Apr. 24th Infant Thompson ...... Apr. 27th Betty Marie Zarowney .. Apr. 27th Infant Karney . « Apr. 29th John Frolick «...e0000.0 Apr. 29th Infant Brown « Apr. 30th Virginia Ann Arkley .. Apr. 30th Annie Waria Waite ... Apr. 30th Infant Bunker May Ist Bessie Diane Hartman .. May Ist Beverley Grace Jollow .. May 1st Mary Marion Ellen Clancy May 1st Joseph Smerko May 4th Madeline Doherty Treebell May 4th Elizabeth Florence Gardner May 5th John Franklin George Ham May 6th Catherine May Burr ..... May 6th Barbara Leone Davidson May 9th Gisela Timar , ssesvs May 12th Elsie Creplack vones May 13th 19th 20th 21st Annie Farnell vs.eseses Mar. 14th YOUNG CHILDREN - ARE INTERESTING: Babes From One to Three: Are Entertainments In + Themselves 3 Children from one to three years. old are the most interesting people in the world. . . I heard a mother say to a friend the other day, "So your little boy is learning to walk, Well = I'ma sorry for you! From one to three is the most troublesome age. He will be into everything." : . It all depends on the point of view, Of course he is "trouble some," for it is his great period of, investigation and he is learning facts about this big world. Let us follow his development up until he is three years old, x At 14 t5 16 months a child learns to put a spoon into his mouth. Few people realize how difficult a feat this is. Mental and muscular co< ordination is involved. By 18 mon= ths he can eat without spilling. At about this time he will start, little plays; he will "go to market" with a basket (if he is walking). By 19 or 20 months he can cut with dull blunt little scissors and otherwise use his hands pretty well. He will attempt to pile up his blocks too! By 2 years of age he will be able to build quite well. Then his curiosity begins in earns est, Then is the time he will look into cupboards, pull open draws and: boxes, and learn to climb. The story time begins now, also particularly stories about pictures. He will be greedy for a little story about eve ery picture he sces, or MY SON JOHN / My son John has Ten Little Toes That ripple and twinkle, and make him jocose, That help him stand upright, then fall on his aose. These Troublesome, Teach able, Talkative Toes! My son John has Two Big Blue Eycs That cry for a minute, then round in surprise, That wrinkle with merriment, frown and look wise. These Innocent, Impudent, Inky-blue Eyes! My son John has Two small red lips That hesitate, tremble, then out a word trips. That stretch into laughter, curl round finger-tips. Such lingering, lovable, Ex- quisite lips! John Patroboy seeeees.es May 15th Helen M. Sutcliffe. A dreary place would be this earth Were there no little people in it; | BABY-GAYS Sterile boracic Swabs you should use these. 25¢ Box ready for use in swabbing Baby's mouth, ears, eyes or nose. For your child's health HOT WEATHER Rubber Pants For warmer weather we recommend Kleinert's ventilated pants. They of- fer the same protection, yet are cool and comfort« able for Baby. 5 35¢ Pair all CRIB SHEET and a tin of PURE GUM RUBBER TINY TOT TALCUM BOTH FOR 50¢ Light Weight Baby Rubber Pants 2 pair 25¢ 10c Cake of TINY TOT SOAP RIGO FEEDERS (graduated) 3 for 25¢ RIGO Gum Rubber NIPPLES 3 for 25¢ and tin of Tiny Tot Talcum BOTH FOR 29¢ SUNDRIES Kar syringes 235c and 35¢ Large Jar ... -BABY CREAMS Must be of purest quality and of such consistency as to heal quickly. We suggest you use J & J Baby Creams Rectal Syringes 35c and 50¢ Eye Pipettes ........18¢ Wash Cloths ..15¢c to 40c¢ Baby Sponges ..18c to 78¢ Milk of Magnesia 25¢ & 50c Baby Cough Syrup ..85c Arontatic Cascara vies o.18c, 25¢ and 40c Stearate of ZING «e000 25¢ J. and J. Talcum .....25¢ Teething Rings 15¢ and 20c Teething NeckMces ..50c Rigo Soothers .«.....15¢ The song of life would lose its mirth ° Were there no children to begin it. Tiny Tot Soap There's no soap made from purer ingredients than Tiny Tot Soap. Made from pure Olive Oil with a little borac- ic acid to neutralize alkali: ity. Safe and Soothing for Baby's tender skin. 3 Cakes 29¢ 15¢ WASHCLOTH FREE BABY BABY BRUSH HOT and WATER MB pci BOTTLE 75¢ 76¢ CHECK BABY'S WEIGHT At regular intervals bring your child to the Rexall Store to be weighed. This is the only way you can check the progress. If prop: er gain is not registered each week by all means consult your physician. Tiny Tot Talcum Contains highly refined Italian Talcum, Boracic Acid and Zinc Stearate. The first two ingredients are in any talcum. Zinc Stearate is added to form a waterproof coating to Baby's Skin protecting it against ammonia rash and chafing. 25¢ Large Tin BABY FOODS Snaiin Dextri Maltose ..........85¢ Robinson's Barley ....40c Mellins Food ............75¢ A. & H. No. 1 and 2 A. & H. No. 3 .......75¢e Meads Protein Milk $1.50 C.M.P. Protein Milk viii satenasa pessin 125 Meads Lactic Acid $1.25 C.M.P, Lactic Acid $1.00 Barleyose ....50c and 85¢ Virol, Infant Tenic 45c Sugar of Milk 35¢ and 60c FOR ALL SICKROOM SUPPLIES NURSERY AND SHOP AT THE REXALL STORE King E. Phone 28 SAVE WITH SAFETY AT Jury & Lovell DRUG STORE & CONFECTIONERY Soda Fountain Phone 2223 Simcoe S. Phone 68 HEALTH'S SAKE REXALL STORE" FOR YOUR BUY YOUR DRUGS AT THE

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